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Orchestra
Concert
8:15
Tuesday
`Lie 741tottidtapta
MI OR
Listen
To
KAUR
Nightly
March 20, 1950 Augustana College, SIOUX FALLS, S. D. VOL. XXXI—NO. 22
Second 'Studies in English'
Features Dr. Arthur Paulson
Mark Graubard Discusses
Brotherhood in 'Series' Talk
Dr. Arthur C. Paulson will•
be featured as guest lecturer
during the second annual
Studies in English at Augus-tana.
Head of the English department
at St. Olaf college, Prof. Paulson
is a well-known scholar in the
field of Norwegian and English lit-erature.
His main address, Ibsen,
Bjornson, and the Norwegian Am-ericans,
1850-1900 will be given
this evening, Monday, March 20,
at 8:00 p. m. in the Fireside
lounge.
The Studies in English program
of the college is an effort to bring
an outstanding scholar to the cam-pus
for a week of lectures, inter-views,
and one formal address.
During his visit, Dr. Paulson will
meet with the 10:20 a. m. fresh-man
English class (12Z) on Mon-day,
Wednesday, and Friday, with
the comparative literature class
on Tuesday at 2:30 p. m. (English
46), and with the creative writing
class (English 32) at 7:00 p. m.
Wednesday.
He will also present a series of
daily lectures, Monday through
Friday, in the Fireside lounge at
1:30 p. m. His topics include The
Legendary Hero, On the Road to
Canterbury, The Dictionary, That
Miltonic Assurance, and Voca-tional
Opportunities in English.
Dr. Paulson \VIII speak- in -Chap-et
on Thursday, March 23. All stu-dents
are invited to the meetings.
Last year's inaugural of the
Studies in English featured Dean
Henning Larsen of the University
of Illinois.
He Dat's Shiftless
Will Go Giftless
The deadline for the ordering of
senior graduation announcements
has been extended to include to-day,
March 20. The announcements
May be ordered at the Bookstore
in any quantity the student de-sires.
Also available are calling
cards which must be ordered in
multiples of one hundred.
The cards this year feature an
engraved picture of Old Main with
announcement of graduation exer-cises
on the inner fold. This is
your last chance, Seniors. If you
don't order your announcements
' today before the Bookstore closes,
you're dead.
Attend Student Body
They're Getting Better
Guest Star Comes
For Theatre Part
Arriving by plane from Kansas
City yesterday was Pat Mc-
Clarney, guest star for the forth-coming
college theatre produc-tion
of Othello. She will spend this
week rehearsing with her co-star,
Keith Herrington, and other mem-bers
of the cast in preparation for
the March 27 opening.
This production, the fourth of
the current season, is an "extra"
show in the schedule. Net pro-ceeds
are to be used to purchase
Pat McClarney
additional lighting equipment for
the college theatre so that new
effects can be obtained in the pro-ductions.
As a result, the administration
has granted permission for this
extra production for which stu-dents
and faculty members will
be asked to pay an admission fee.
Tickets will be on reserve in the
theatre office at the end of this
week, beginning at 9:30 Friday
morning.
Director Bob Snook has espe-cially
urged that students and fa-culty
members attend the opening
performance if possible. An in-formal
reception for the two guest
artists and the cast will be given
in the lounge following the per-formance,
to which all members
of the first night audience are in-vited.
NOTICE
Remember the Lenten ser-vices
Wednesday evening,
March 22, in the Old Main
chapel at 6:30, with Jean Boe
as speaker.
College Lists 63
Summer Courses
Sixty-three courses will be of-fered
during the college's summer
sessions this year. Special empha-sis
will be placed on courses ne-cessary
for the renewal of teach-ing
permits and certificates.
The first term begins June 5 and
ends on July 8; the second term
will begin on July 10 and continue
through August 12. By attending
both terms, a student can com-plete
a year course in science, lan-guage,
literaure, history, etc.
Tuition for each term is $50, or
$90 — providing registration for
both is indicated at the beginning
of the first. Tuition is based on the
normal load of six semester cre-dits.
If a student is signed up for
less than 5 semester credits, tui-
Lion is $12 for each credit hour.
Summer school information may
be secured through the registrar's
office or the office of public re-lations.
Panel Discussion
Tops Careers Day
Climaxing Augustana's third
annual Careers Day was the panel
discussion, "What good is my ma-jor
at Augie to my vocation?" on
Tuesday, March 14.
George S. Speer, director of the
-Institute -of- -Psychological Service
of the Illinois Institute of Tech-nology,
moderated the panel. Other
speakers on the panel were, I. I.
Weiseth of the Kayenay Engrav-ing
Co., of Mason City, Iowa; Miss
Olga Sorsenson of the South Da-kota
State Employment Service
at Aberdeen; Miss Agnes B.
Thompson, director of nurses at
Sioux Valley hospital; E. R. Zim-merman
of the Sioux Falls branch
of International Harvester; C. C.
Jacobsen of the South Dakota Ed-ucation
association; and Prof. H.
M. Blegen of the Augustana fac-ulty.
On Monday evening, March 13,
Mr. Speer delivered the convoca-tion
address. He spoke on the
values of phychological testing.
AAo on the convocation program
was the radio choir under the di-rection
of Dr. Arnold Running.
Tuesday morning Careers Days
speakers were guests at a faculty
coffee hour in the faculty lounge.
Speakers met with students in
informal discussion groups on
Tuesday afternoon. Student dis-cussion
chairmen were LaVonne
Campbell, Neil Raber, Fred Hall-strom
and Paul Hohman.
Injured Students
Recuperating OK
With the exception of Kathryn
Jurgenson who is still at home in
Cla•kfield, Minn., recuperating
from her injuries, all of the stu-dents
involved in the car-truck
smash of March 10 were expected
back in school today.
The three male members of the
unlucky sextet were back in class
as early as last Wednesday. All
were sporting bandaged faces and
Ray Stolaas was adding names to
his wrist cast. Engstrom and Ell-ingson
still limped.
Little was known of the actual
condition of the Misses Ellison and
G•inager, but knowledge of the
injuries suffered led friends to be-lieve
they would be back on cam-pus
this week.
Miss Jurgenson, more seriously
hurt with a fractured jaw and
other injuries, was expected to
miss more school than the others.
A picture of the wrecked car in
which the six were riding back to
Sioux Falls from a Rock Rapids,
Iowa, music festival is shown
elsewhere this issue.
Students Attend
Church Meeting
Last night six Augustana stu-dents
returned from Iowa City,
Iowa, where they attended the
Midwest Ecumenical conference
held there last weekend.
Going as delegates from Augus-tana
were: Wanda Severson,
Frances Iverson, Effie Larson,
Charlotte Scott, Paul Pierson and
Verlyn Smith.
Guderyahn Leads
Symphony Group
After a strenuous week of re-hearsal,
the Augustana Symphony
orchestra will play it's first con-cert
of the season, tomorrow eve-ning
in the gym-auditorium at
8:15.
Tomorrow evening's perform-ance
will mark the 22nd annual
concert under the direction of
Prof. Richard Guderyahn. Orga-nized
in 1927, it is one of the
few of its type in this section of
the country. Professor Guderyahn
received his training at the Ameri-can
Conservatory of Music in Chi-cago
where he was awarded his
Mus. B. and Mus. M. degrees. An
the fields of directing and playing,
accomplished musician in both
he was a student under such not-ables
as Dr. Roy Harris while do-ing
graduate work at Colorado col-lege.
A program of highlights is
promised in tomorrow's perform-ance.
Two movements from the
Haydn Click Symphony which re-quire
apt artistry and skill as well
as the Perpetuum Mobile, a dis-play
number by Carl Bohm, which
will be performed in unison and
from memory by 19 violinists. So-prana
soloist with the orchestra,
Dona Carlson, will sing the Un
bel di aria from Puccini's Madame
Butterfly.
Dr. Mark Graubard
sociate professor of natural`
science and history of science at
the University of Minnesota.
Visitor in Russia
He visited Russia in 1932 as
National Research Fellow in the
biological sciences, and again in
1936 while holding a Rockefeller
Foundation research grant. He
speaks the Russian language and
has been acquainted with several
of Russia's foremost scientists.
His appraisal of the current So-viet
attitude toward science is a
critical and interesting one.
The guest speaker also is the
author of 14 technical papers on
pigments and hormones, his spe-cial
field of research. He is con=
tinning his research and is com-pleting
his work on the history of
magic, witchcraft, alchemy and
astrology as the forerunners of
modern science. He is the author
of Man, the Slave and Master
(1937), Man's Food, Its Rhyme or
Reason (1942) and is preparing
The Quest for Science.
At 11:20 a. m. he will speak to
biology classes, and at 2:30 p. m.
will address all science majors.
Instructors in the science division
of the college will arrange a
luncheon in his honor.
Augie Presents
Program at SFC
Several Augie Students went
over the hill last Wednesday
morning to present an exchange-student
body program to •Sioux-
Falls college students.
The program included a piano
solo by Len Boe, a clarinet solo
by Leland Lillehaug and a skit
portraying the "history" of Au-gustana.
Francis Smith was in
charge of arrangements.
Sioux Falls college will present
a student body program here on
April 21.
SEATED IN CONCERT POSITION are the members of Augustana's 42-piece Sym-phony
orchestra. The group, under the direction of Prof. Richard Guderyahn, will be
heard in concert tomorrow evening at 8:15 in the gym-auditorium. Sioux Falls patrons
are to be favored by one of the best programs planned in years. Students will be ad-mitted
by activity ticket.
• Brotherhood—Science or Senti-ment
will be discussed 'by Dr.
Mark A. Graubard, noted scien-tist
and lecturer, when he speaks
at Augustana on Friday, March
24 during a 9:20 chapel period in
the gym. He will be presented
here by the Artist and Lecture
Series.
Dr. Graubard was born in Po-land
in 1904, came to the United
States at the age of 16, and be-came
an American citizen in 1937.
He received his 'bachelor of science
degree from City college in New
York; his master's and doctor
of philosophy degrees from Col-umbia
university.
Since the fall of 1947, Dr. Grau-bard
has held the position of as-

Orchestra
Concert
8:15
Tuesday
`Lie 741tottidtapta
MI OR
Listen
To
KAUR
Nightly
March 20, 1950 Augustana College, SIOUX FALLS, S. D. VOL. XXXI—NO. 22
Second 'Studies in English'
Features Dr. Arthur Paulson
Mark Graubard Discusses
Brotherhood in 'Series' Talk
Dr. Arthur C. Paulson will•
be featured as guest lecturer
during the second annual
Studies in English at Augus-tana.
Head of the English department
at St. Olaf college, Prof. Paulson
is a well-known scholar in the
field of Norwegian and English lit-erature.
His main address, Ibsen,
Bjornson, and the Norwegian Am-ericans,
1850-1900 will be given
this evening, Monday, March 20,
at 8:00 p. m. in the Fireside
lounge.
The Studies in English program
of the college is an effort to bring
an outstanding scholar to the cam-pus
for a week of lectures, inter-views,
and one formal address.
During his visit, Dr. Paulson will
meet with the 10:20 a. m. fresh-man
English class (12Z) on Mon-day,
Wednesday, and Friday, with
the comparative literature class
on Tuesday at 2:30 p. m. (English
46), and with the creative writing
class (English 32) at 7:00 p. m.
Wednesday.
He will also present a series of
daily lectures, Monday through
Friday, in the Fireside lounge at
1:30 p. m. His topics include The
Legendary Hero, On the Road to
Canterbury, The Dictionary, That
Miltonic Assurance, and Voca-tional
Opportunities in English.
Dr. Paulson \VIII speak- in -Chap-et
on Thursday, March 23. All stu-dents
are invited to the meetings.
Last year's inaugural of the
Studies in English featured Dean
Henning Larsen of the University
of Illinois.
He Dat's Shiftless
Will Go Giftless
The deadline for the ordering of
senior graduation announcements
has been extended to include to-day,
March 20. The announcements
May be ordered at the Bookstore
in any quantity the student de-sires.
Also available are calling
cards which must be ordered in
multiples of one hundred.
The cards this year feature an
engraved picture of Old Main with
announcement of graduation exer-cises
on the inner fold. This is
your last chance, Seniors. If you
don't order your announcements
' today before the Bookstore closes,
you're dead.
Attend Student Body
They're Getting Better
Guest Star Comes
For Theatre Part
Arriving by plane from Kansas
City yesterday was Pat Mc-
Clarney, guest star for the forth-coming
college theatre produc-tion
of Othello. She will spend this
week rehearsing with her co-star,
Keith Herrington, and other mem-bers
of the cast in preparation for
the March 27 opening.
This production, the fourth of
the current season, is an "extra"
show in the schedule. Net pro-ceeds
are to be used to purchase
Pat McClarney
additional lighting equipment for
the college theatre so that new
effects can be obtained in the pro-ductions.
As a result, the administration
has granted permission for this
extra production for which stu-dents
and faculty members will
be asked to pay an admission fee.
Tickets will be on reserve in the
theatre office at the end of this
week, beginning at 9:30 Friday
morning.
Director Bob Snook has espe-cially
urged that students and fa-culty
members attend the opening
performance if possible. An in-formal
reception for the two guest
artists and the cast will be given
in the lounge following the per-formance,
to which all members
of the first night audience are in-vited.
NOTICE
Remember the Lenten ser-vices
Wednesday evening,
March 22, in the Old Main
chapel at 6:30, with Jean Boe
as speaker.
College Lists 63
Summer Courses
Sixty-three courses will be of-fered
during the college's summer
sessions this year. Special empha-sis
will be placed on courses ne-cessary
for the renewal of teach-ing
permits and certificates.
The first term begins June 5 and
ends on July 8; the second term
will begin on July 10 and continue
through August 12. By attending
both terms, a student can com-plete
a year course in science, lan-guage,
literaure, history, etc.
Tuition for each term is $50, or
$90 — providing registration for
both is indicated at the beginning
of the first. Tuition is based on the
normal load of six semester cre-dits.
If a student is signed up for
less than 5 semester credits, tui-
Lion is $12 for each credit hour.
Summer school information may
be secured through the registrar's
office or the office of public re-lations.
Panel Discussion
Tops Careers Day
Climaxing Augustana's third
annual Careers Day was the panel
discussion, "What good is my ma-jor
at Augie to my vocation?" on
Tuesday, March 14.
George S. Speer, director of the
-Institute -of- -Psychological Service
of the Illinois Institute of Tech-nology,
moderated the panel. Other
speakers on the panel were, I. I.
Weiseth of the Kayenay Engrav-ing
Co., of Mason City, Iowa; Miss
Olga Sorsenson of the South Da-kota
State Employment Service
at Aberdeen; Miss Agnes B.
Thompson, director of nurses at
Sioux Valley hospital; E. R. Zim-merman
of the Sioux Falls branch
of International Harvester; C. C.
Jacobsen of the South Dakota Ed-ucation
association; and Prof. H.
M. Blegen of the Augustana fac-ulty.
On Monday evening, March 13,
Mr. Speer delivered the convoca-tion
address. He spoke on the
values of phychological testing.
AAo on the convocation program
was the radio choir under the di-rection
of Dr. Arnold Running.
Tuesday morning Careers Days
speakers were guests at a faculty
coffee hour in the faculty lounge.
Speakers met with students in
informal discussion groups on
Tuesday afternoon. Student dis-cussion
chairmen were LaVonne
Campbell, Neil Raber, Fred Hall-strom
and Paul Hohman.
Injured Students
Recuperating OK
With the exception of Kathryn
Jurgenson who is still at home in
Cla•kfield, Minn., recuperating
from her injuries, all of the stu-dents
involved in the car-truck
smash of March 10 were expected
back in school today.
The three male members of the
unlucky sextet were back in class
as early as last Wednesday. All
were sporting bandaged faces and
Ray Stolaas was adding names to
his wrist cast. Engstrom and Ell-ingson
still limped.
Little was known of the actual
condition of the Misses Ellison and
G•inager, but knowledge of the
injuries suffered led friends to be-lieve
they would be back on cam-pus
this week.
Miss Jurgenson, more seriously
hurt with a fractured jaw and
other injuries, was expected to
miss more school than the others.
A picture of the wrecked car in
which the six were riding back to
Sioux Falls from a Rock Rapids,
Iowa, music festival is shown
elsewhere this issue.
Students Attend
Church Meeting
Last night six Augustana stu-dents
returned from Iowa City,
Iowa, where they attended the
Midwest Ecumenical conference
held there last weekend.
Going as delegates from Augus-tana
were: Wanda Severson,
Frances Iverson, Effie Larson,
Charlotte Scott, Paul Pierson and
Verlyn Smith.
Guderyahn Leads
Symphony Group
After a strenuous week of re-hearsal,
the Augustana Symphony
orchestra will play it's first con-cert
of the season, tomorrow eve-ning
in the gym-auditorium at
8:15.
Tomorrow evening's perform-ance
will mark the 22nd annual
concert under the direction of
Prof. Richard Guderyahn. Orga-nized
in 1927, it is one of the
few of its type in this section of
the country. Professor Guderyahn
received his training at the Ameri-can
Conservatory of Music in Chi-cago
where he was awarded his
Mus. B. and Mus. M. degrees. An
the fields of directing and playing,
accomplished musician in both
he was a student under such not-ables
as Dr. Roy Harris while do-ing
graduate work at Colorado col-lege.
A program of highlights is
promised in tomorrow's perform-ance.
Two movements from the
Haydn Click Symphony which re-quire
apt artistry and skill as well
as the Perpetuum Mobile, a dis-play
number by Carl Bohm, which
will be performed in unison and
from memory by 19 violinists. So-prana
soloist with the orchestra,
Dona Carlson, will sing the Un
bel di aria from Puccini's Madame
Butterfly.
Dr. Mark Graubard
sociate professor of natural`
science and history of science at
the University of Minnesota.
Visitor in Russia
He visited Russia in 1932 as
National Research Fellow in the
biological sciences, and again in
1936 while holding a Rockefeller
Foundation research grant. He
speaks the Russian language and
has been acquainted with several
of Russia's foremost scientists.
His appraisal of the current So-viet
attitude toward science is a
critical and interesting one.
The guest speaker also is the
author of 14 technical papers on
pigments and hormones, his spe-cial
field of research. He is con=
tinning his research and is com-pleting
his work on the history of
magic, witchcraft, alchemy and
astrology as the forerunners of
modern science. He is the author
of Man, the Slave and Master
(1937), Man's Food, Its Rhyme or
Reason (1942) and is preparing
The Quest for Science.
At 11:20 a. m. he will speak to
biology classes, and at 2:30 p. m.
will address all science majors.
Instructors in the science division
of the college will arrange a
luncheon in his honor.
Augie Presents
Program at SFC
Several Augie Students went
over the hill last Wednesday
morning to present an exchange-student
body program to •Sioux-
Falls college students.
The program included a piano
solo by Len Boe, a clarinet solo
by Leland Lillehaug and a skit
portraying the "history" of Au-gustana.
Francis Smith was in
charge of arrangements.
Sioux Falls college will present
a student body program here on
April 21.
SEATED IN CONCERT POSITION are the members of Augustana's 42-piece Sym-phony
orchestra. The group, under the direction of Prof. Richard Guderyahn, will be
heard in concert tomorrow evening at 8:15 in the gym-auditorium. Sioux Falls patrons
are to be favored by one of the best programs planned in years. Students will be ad-mitted
by activity ticket.
• Brotherhood—Science or Senti-ment
will be discussed 'by Dr.
Mark A. Graubard, noted scien-tist
and lecturer, when he speaks
at Augustana on Friday, March
24 during a 9:20 chapel period in
the gym. He will be presented
here by the Artist and Lecture
Series.
Dr. Graubard was born in Po-land
in 1904, came to the United
States at the age of 16, and be-came
an American citizen in 1937.
He received his 'bachelor of science
degree from City college in New
York; his master's and doctor
of philosophy degrees from Col-umbia
university.
Since the fall of 1947, Dr. Grau-bard
has held the position of as-